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Time for Action Against the Affirmative

If it comes as a shock to you that affirmative action policies are not only broken, but actually serve contrary to their intended purpose of creating a color-blind, racially diverse America, then you are either wholly ignorant or frightfully naïve. Or a hard-line liberal. Take your pick.

So imagine my shock to see this column by Richard Cohen credited to The Washington Post (column mirrored on RealClearPolitics.com).

Needless to say, I was purely speechless. Never before had I seen the case against affirmative action so aptly made in one concise column. Much less a fair-minded piece in The Washington Post’s archive. But I digress.

The column talks about a firefighter from Connecticut named Frank Ricci. Ricci, in spite of having dyslexia, managed to overcome impossible odds and score sixth-highest out of 77 candidates who took the firefighters’ promotion exam to become a lieutenant. Ricci was not promoted. What was the charge? What was the egregious offense? Why was this man, who worked impossibly hard to build himself a better future, denied what he deserved? And, for that matter, why were the five men who scored higher than Mr. Ricci also not promoted? The department wanted to promote someone of color; so all 77 scores were thrown out because no black candidates scored high enough.

In America, the Founding Fathers envisioned a nation where individuals fought for their own successes and were not punished for those successes or denied the fruits of their labor by a governing body that adhered to its own arbitrary set of moral guidelines. In the Ricci case, the governing body decided that it was time for some black people to get promoted. That was their “moral” decision—to meet a quota instead of acknowledging the hard work and earned credit of a man who himself had to overcome amazing adversity. Frank Ricci deserved better.

A government can only see people through numbers. Which is why the US Census tries to block people by racial category. According to 2007 estimates*, 66% of Americans were “White persons not Hispanic,” while 12.8% of the population was simply “Black” and 15.1% were “of Hispanic or Latino origin.” Does this bring questions to your mind? It should. For starters, if there are so many more white people than there are the two largest minorities in America, isn’t it good to reason that there are more white people getting promoted or being accepted into colleges? After all, how can a 66% group and a 12.8% group ever be brought to 50/50 in any work force? It’s an unreasonable expectation. But the problem goes deeper than simply the analysis of the numbers: the problem is the numbers themselves.

Simply put: people are not numbers. One cannot judge the work ethic of a decimal point any more than one could claim to divide a person’s race by the square root of seven.

All people are different, endowed by their Creator with various gifts, abilities, talents, and shortcomings. Just as there are lazy white men, there are lazy black men, lazy Latinos, hard-working white men, hard-working black men, hard-working Latinos, as well as women who fit into any and all of the aforementioned categories. People are unique. To say that a system of quotas or numerical standards would aptly embody the American ideal of personal accomplishment is downright idiotic. Some will succeed; some will fail. That is the nature of a free world. That is also the nature of a color-blind world; it is where people’s successes are based on their own achievements, not based on what some faceless bureaucracy decided their successes should amount to.

 

 

*Data taken from:

http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/00000.html

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